4
THE SEVENTH DAY IS THE SABBATH OF TIIE LORD THY GOD Tobccn d THE IOE KING ImllGrnn Down f am Ihe No tl tI hoary beard C me .. bent old man whose me 11 was" c d A .lntI of co was n I shand Wh c\ he wa cd anon I ke a illJst c wand And f he ... cd that wand but Ihr cc All th ngs anear e e f 08t a I ce the The one that 19 preacblllg m Charlestowr. Yes You hil,\e probably notICed that he 19 lame I have notlCed It saId Dormg and asked hffil how It happened and he told me he got lmrt when a boy 1866 bung us if unnsed-neglected-the wave that bro 19ht vill soon take It away GOD KNOWS IT ALL In the d m recesses of tl y sp r t schamber Is there some b dden g eflhon rna} st not tell? Let not thy heart for .. 1 ber H s p ty ng eye fho well God knows It .. U Yes responded!Ir Hanford wIth emotIOn the dear boy never conld he made to say that It h s fathe s brutality But hsten he contlllued as he saw that DOTIng And art thou tossed on b !low, oftemptot on' And,. a Ild ,t do good but enl oft pre was about to speak Tn I, When Cha les was about the 0 th nk among the wa,cs of tr bulat on of yOUI son Wilham he was one 'larlhl y hopes when earlhly refuge the most acti e and mtelhgent bOJ B a s- God knows It all had ever seen I was fond of him and espeCially of hIS physrcal beau*F'! thy doell. of shame can and But nnfol'tunately I In 'orne dark spot no b man eye cm see was cmsed WIth an lrntable and VIO Then walk n p de w tl out one s ght re lent temper and was m the Habit of vealmg pun shmg my children unde the In TJ G t rem rse that should disqUIet fllence of passIOn and \ engeance m God knows t all stead of from the ] ctates of reason Art tl t d d h duty and enlIghtened affectIOn os an poor an ell Yj One day Cbarley offended me by Tl e hea cns abo e thelll th ek clouds ar some bOYish and trifling misdemean r.Jed or !lId I treated hIm almo t exncth :l.nd we I n gh crusllcd- a earl Iy strengtH np>rwd as you treated your son a fe v m n 'l!o f ndJ) va ce to sa Be notaf d Ites ago I struck hIm v!Olentl) (iod knOllS It all and he fell upon a pile of stones at Art tl au a rna rner thy tenr drops hIS SIde and Injured h 8 SIde so bad flow ng ly that the result was he "as er p For one so C.'l.rlJ le,t I earth lind tl co P led for 1 fe sa d 1\1r H £ d The depth of or of no hu an sp nt I no v ng an or m '\Yh ch moan. n I ke the moan ng tones of deepest SOl row and remorse se r and covermg hiS face WIth hiS hands God knows tall A penod of oPPl eSSlVe Silence fol Dost tho 1001 back pol' a fe of. nn IIg lowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When I found that my boy d d TI Y 0; pen tenee f nnforoot not nse nom tl e stones on wb ch he ad kno v. t a I had fallen I se zed hIm by the ar n Then go to God Ponr t) 0 hearts be aud udely pulled h m to hiS feet fo e h m and was about to st Ike h m agam TI e. no g of fOur Falher cannot f I when so nethmg tl at I saw m hIS And let yo r g aleful songs of pra se ado e face h s look an my ar m and H m I a.ked h m If he was hurt To 'a e fo g e and e 1 I am aflllld that I am pa he mIldly ans vered chnglllg to my a m fO! SIP] 0 t AN ELOQUENT !FAREWELL Rev A L Stone D D of Bos WheI e I a.ked 1lI gteat alarm for notwlthstandmg my bIutal ty I ton when about to leave for the Pa fa rly Idohzed the boy Clfic shores-h s future field of labor He e he eplied laJ mg hIS hand upon lIS lip In SIlence I took h n III my RIms snd ca led h m to h s b d fi om '\\ h cl he er a ose the same brIght a¢tI ve ",10 IOUS boy that I had so Cl uell) struck dow n on that pIle of stones But after many months he came fo tTl a pale saddened little fello v I obblmg on a crdtch Hel e l'IIr Haufor d hI oke down :;Ind wept I ke a chIld and the tears al§o rolled down Do Wlien hc " Me 1 1lI Hanford said ThIS IS a humllIatmg narratn e ne ghbor Dormg and I would not hM e I elated It t.o you hlld I not sup posed that you needed the leSion whlCh It conta ns It IS Impossible fo me to give yo I an adequate no tIon of the sufferIllg that I h;lVe un dergone on account of my brutal -PI cae! ed hill farewell sel mon to an Immense congregatIOn The des e to obta n places 1lI the church mduc ed the Issumg of tlCkets but the ero vd broke through all rest a 11t and entered the chmch pell mdl fill ng ermy slttmg and standmg plaee So great was the heat and so close the atmosphet e that se' eIal ladles fsmted and many men were over ---CD&..-- --Ar» '"-"" cludmg paragraphs of the diSCO lIse llloan by care eX(JIl;l.Dlc:a John :Dor ng to )0 ng lad of that he add Iashness to ny boy fottunate ly It bas been oven Iled to my ow n good and to tbat of my fnmlly also rhe remed\ tho Igh tel' ble was comllete and no othe ch Id of m 1e has e\ er bee I p mihed by me except \ hen I as m the full posseSSIOn and Every step fOl ward IS mto the uwown God may not accept me it IS m my heart to speak for IIffil on that Western sbore but he may not let me speak Tbe Atlantic wa1>'es are to be crossed I may never cross them The PaCific 01e'18 hft them selves between theIr white mte dICt may bar me out Instead of that dIstant Golden Gate my feet may pass III at the Gate of Pea 1 Dan ger dlsappomtment SICkness death -these may be the only heutage to "II h eh I seem to be In such haste to be gone Say not In such He would I a\e done better to have stay ed rhat would not tl us be made certam The Wllhng mmd the offer of the healt IS what Goi accepts the results that he beyond make no plOper part of hIS estimate or ou S a heavy blow on and tl at and lCI eatmg the blol'/:s as he spol e the last of "h ch knocked the boy 0 er a plOI tl\.at waS' standing by h S Side Get Ip an I go mto tl e house conlmllcd the father a d see If you can t keep 0 t of mischIef for a ylt Ie an 1 RtOP that crymg or 111 gn e yOi\ someth ng to cry fOl The boy ala ted fo the house st ugghng to S Ipp es, h s sops as he '\\ e It Ie IS aston shmg sa d Donng add essmg a neIghbor name'li Han fOld wi 0 near m a barn and of course 1 ad seen and I ea d all that had passed how troublesome boys are Just see those oat! now that I ve got to pICk up for that boy s ca elessne 8 and he po nted to a mCaS ue of oats, hlCh \Villham had aCCIdentally oHrtu ned. :And It was for that tnfle that yo I assaulted your child und knock ed hIm down rephe I MI Hanfo d m a souo ..ful tone Do mg looked from the oats n OUIprISe and lepeated Assaulted my child ana knOCKed I m down Wh)1 what do yon mean neIghbor Hanford Just what I say DId you not knock the child over the plow He kmd and fell over It Ir(lpliled Donng Do you go agl'llnlst parental authonty Haven t I a nght to pUUlsh my own chIldren' Certamly you have ] esponded Hanford III a proper manner alid III a proper sp nt but not other WIse Do you think that a fathel has a right to revenge hffilself npon his child 9 mg abo t revenge 1 Of lOUIse not but who stalk WeI fnend Donng let me you ano her questIOn for what pnr pose should a chIld be pumshed Why to make It better and to do It good of COUl se qUIckly an !wered Dormg For any other qtletly asked Hanford Well no not that I can thmk ot. Just now ephed Donng thoughtfi lIy And now my frleno kmdly continued 11r Hanford do you exe CIsa of my best fae lIt es and when my sense of duty has been chastened and softened by reason nd affect on I devoted m) se1f to poor Char ley flom the tIme he lett liS bed and we en ne to mderstand one anothe as I thllk but few fathms and sons e.e do The pOOl boy nOHr blam e 1 me for bhghtn g so much happl ness fOI hIm and I have somet mes tned to thmk that h s hfe has been made happlel on the whole than It would ha\ e been had I not been tanght my luty tl olgh hIS sacrifice nmghbot Dor ng I should be soh y to have you and yo r son W II 1 am pass through a SImilar 0 deal I tr lIst that we "hall not em phat cally and gravely responded Donng I thank ) ou for your story fr end Hanford and I shall t y and profit hy It And he dId profit by It and we hope that every pal ent who IS eapa ble of stnkmg hIS ch Id m anger or I',,,,til,,uce, that reads thIS sketch from will profit by It THE SHELL ON THE SHORE We take from an English maga zme thiS beautIfully told and mstruc tlve mCldent I had turned over the pebbles and the damp weeds and sought WIth naked feet amongst the waves for some bnght shell or colored stone to cauy home but I could find none TIred out I sat down on llf pile of stones to 1 est an 1 to watch the wa\es un oil themselves on the walt mg sands I heeded not the tIde but let It IlO and come \tlthout no nce suppose your treatment to your son a few moments ago did him any good or has lllcIeased lus respect affectIOn for you The boy I After a longer mten al than I dare tell eonsldermg I was WIthout boots OIl stockmgs and my coat damp With tile splay of the last tide II woke up from my dreammg and re newed searcl! for Jl, pr ze and Bure enough there yras a shell glIstenmg and gleammg colored like sunht crystal gust dropped from the white finiers of some danng wave I did not hurry to possess myself of It, but sat still admmng It was mme I was SUrB I could reach It at any mo ment"l'l'Ith my stick and who was near on thIs lonely beach to pICk It up er e I could get It 9 Splasb splash and up rolled a huge wave hlssmg and hurrymg the stones " ettmg my feet--,.and the shell where IS It' I aronnd venture to say IS utterly unconSCIOUS of havmg done any wrong and yet snddenly assanlted hIm WIth an and vIOlencfl, and gave hIm a beatinll': w}nch no pemtenyary con I followed the recedmg dnp pmg sea grass and creamy of froth only remsmed to me tbe shell the beautiful shell was gone Old Neptune had altered his mmd got back hiS pearl A httle loss thIS but uttenng a of the vnlne of obedIence And so we take lea, e of one nn OthOl It does not seem real to me yet Is thIS my last Sabbath WIth ) ou 1 Am I preachmg my last se mon here 'When another Sabbath dawns '" III ItS nsmg sun come up for me {Jut of the sea? And arfl none of my Sabbaths any more to lead me h ther 1 Y ct It would be a short meetmg God may pc m t us some meetmgs by the way He \\ II soon b lUg us together nm er to part I leave With yo 1 tl e labOlS of seven teen years still If God will to bem some fruit among you I leave my man fold Imperfectfrons and f mIt es to your chanty that they may fo give nnd be forglvbn and fOlgotten I lellve for an occasIOnal glance one lIttle gave III the shades of annnrn_ whet e my first born sleeps I leave too my memory to bfJ chenshed and guarded If you WIll accept the trust I leave my love. my thanks my prayers My feet may go and hear my body forth but.lleave my heart behInd Let us pay DEBTS DUE TO GOD A merchant m answer to IlIqUi nes refers back to a perIOd when he says In consecratmg my life anew to God a val e of the ensnar m" mfluences of riches and the ne b of Vlct can he subjected to hay mg tjte outrage mqUired mto by a legtslatlve commIttee But let me tell YOIl ahttle storr You know my Charles! lofty lesson never to lose an oppor tumty of taklDg every gtft of nlercy or 1lIIeiUlbeS8 the tide of tUDe may TERMS- $2 60 a. Yea.r ill advanoe. ;A leadmg object man should be to sec r e pel mane It hornell for stability It should qonslst more the better 11 paId for land and up to a I house sholild be as omfO! table attractIve as one ha the lllak ng It should e one the can gr 0 1>' to and" III chng arclUndl more and more fir ly With passmg year The wner should and purpose to of It as long as h children should gto there IS one I lace fi d and stable them am d all chang 8 Amencans are al gether mg III then hab ts e cheaply and pull them do 1 egl et 01 we sell 0 It away half a dozen tlihes and III the valll hopei of bettenng conditIOn How fuch better choose early m hfe then plans WIth refer ence to Even though our gams lue promised elsewhhe a shonld seldom be for ali un'cer-q tamty A bird III the hanells two III the bush Ottly those who Ha\ e """I}C1J,.I'''''''4 It know how firmly a fam Iy fu,,,,,t.,,iI attached to theu long loved home stead No chllili'cn love home so well as those who have known As the yo mg become of mar p-Illge,anlle age they should go out flom the old homestead feelmg that It IS to be the model after whlCh thmr should be e.tabl18hcd and know tha .. tch. mil unchanged as the parents live a place to they can return and where they WIll be welcome A pleasmg "I ter confirms our doctrme thus 'The" "' gam lU u8mg settled down It 1B twofold Each year accumulates the matenal by ,hlch labor IS lelisened The rough channels ?f labor become worn and smooth A change lllV olves a great loss and rarely IS tlime a correspond "CI:<"":J lllg gam TIme IS lost labor BUS pended money paid out, the wear wrIter, felt as we!! fef;}_ and tear of r emo\ al lIS no small Item lives were as aetive as 0\11' 0 ...... and e all the breakmg up of old passe<f like a vapor, ... _ •. ': l'a:sSQ.ci:LtieJUs IS often disastloqs m the wore the safile extreme Plnents and ch ldren be when her agam money wOllld h,S frIends and rest and shelter of s long and WIth the neceSSIty But hiS con come unsettled 1lI, theu habits If not be The world m theIr morals Let the man who attractIODS for our y," ....... u. has a homestead kreI It let hIm had that has none get one and labor to render It a treasured remembrance the absent and a constlmtJoyito - -'--'---- vho abide m It 'Io all of every mtelhgent thoughtful pelrso:ri, must gn e a hem tJ al The wealthy plenty of cattle yomg g rls An fello v who vas ant had to lead had two of the

0; fVol+22+(1866)/Sabbath+Recorder_1866_22_9.pdflowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When

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Page 1: 0; fVol+22+(1866)/Sabbath+Recorder_1866_22_9.pdflowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When

THE SEVENTH DAY IS THE SABBATH OF TIIE LORD THY GOD

Tobccn d

THE IOE KING ImllGrnn

Down f am Ihe No tl tI hoary beard C me .. bent old man whose me 11 was" c d A .lntI of co was n I shand Wh c\ he wa cd anon I ke a illJst c wand And f he ~ ... cd that wand but Ihr cc All th ngs anear e e f 08t a I ce

the

The one that 19 preacblllg m Charlestowr. ~

Yes You hil,\e probably notICed that he 19 lame ~

I have notlCed It saId Dormg and asked hffil how It happened

and he told me he got lmrt when a boy

1866

bung us if unnsed-neglected-the wave that bro 19ht vill soon take It away

GOD KNOWS IT ALL In the d m recesses of tl y sp r t schamber

Is there some b dden g eflhon rna} st not tell?

Let not thy heart for .. 1 ber

H s p ty ng eye fho well

God knows It .. U

Yes responded!Ir Hanford wIth emotIOn the dear boy never conld he made to say that It wa!~by h s fathe s brutality But hsten he contlllued as he saw that DOTIng And art thou tossed on b !low, oftemptot on'

And,. a Ild ,t do good but enl oft pre was about to speak Tn I,

When Cha les was about the 0 th nk among the wa,cs of tr bulat on of yOUI son Wilham he was one Whe~ 'larlhly hopes when earlhly refuge the most acti e and mtelhgent bOJ B a s- God knows It all

had ever seen I was fond of him and espeCially of hIS physrcal beau*F'! d~!::~ thy doell. of shame can and progre~" But nnfol'tunately I In 'orne dark spot no b man eye cm see was cmsed WIth an lrntable and VIO Then walk n p de w tl out one s ght re lent temper and was m the Habit of vealmg pun shmg my children unde the In TJ G t I~p rem rse that should disqUIet fllence of passIOn and \ engeance m God knows t all stead of from the ] ctates of reason Art tl t d d h duty and enlIghtened affectIOn ~!r~rJ' os an poor an ell Yj

One day Cbarley offended me by Tl e hea cns abo e thelll th ek clouds ar some bOYish and trifling misdemean r.Jed or !lId I treated hIm almo t exncth :l.nd we I n gh crusllcd- a earl Iy strengtH

~ • np>rwd as you treated your son a fe v m n 'l!o f ndJ) va ce to sa Be notaf d Ites ago I struck hIm v!Olentl) (iod knOllS It all

and he fell upon a pile of stones at Art tl au a rna rner ~e thy tenr drops hIS SIde and Injured h 8 SIde so bad flow ng ly that the result was he "as er p For one so C.'l.rlJ le,t I earth lind tl co

Pled for 1 fe sa d 1\1r H £ d The depth of or of no hu an sp nt I no v ng an or m '\Yh ch moan. n "ecre~ I ke the moan ng

tones of deepest SOl row and remorse se r and covermg hiS face WIth hiS hands God knows tall

A penod of oPPl eSSlVe Silence fol Dost tho 1001 back pol' a fe of. nn IIg lowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b.

When I found that my boy d d TI Y t,~~ 0; pen tenee f nnforoot not nse nom tl e stones on wb ch he ad kno v. t a I had fallen I se zed hIm by the ar n Then go to God Ponr t) 0 hearts be aud udely pulled h m to hiS feet fo e h m and was about to st Ike h m agam TI e. no g of fOur Falher cannot f I when so nethmg tl at I saw m hIS And let yo r g aleful songs of pra se ado e face h s look an e~ted my ar m and H m I a.ked h m If he was hurt To 'a e fo g e and eG~ ~:o~~sd ~oJI e 1

I am aflllld that I am pa he mIldly ans vered chnglllg to my a m fO! SIP] 0 t

AN ELOQUENT !FAREWELL Rev A L Stone D D of Bos

WheI e ~ I a.ked 1lI gteat alarm for notwlthstandmg my bIutal ty I ton when about to leave for the Pa fa rly Idohzed the boy Clfic shores-h s future field of labor

He e he eplied laJ mg hIS hand upon lIS lip

In SIlence I took h n III my RIms snd ca led h m to h s b d fi om '\\ h cl he ~e er a ose the same brIght a¢tI ve ",10 IOUS boy that I had so Cl uell) struck dow n on that pIle of stones But after many months he came fo tTl a pale saddened little fello v I obblmg on a crdtch

Hel e l'IIr Haufor d hI oke down :;Ind wept I ke a chIld and the tears al§o rolled down Do ~ Wlien hc " Me 1 1lI Hanford said

ThIS IS a humllIatmg narratn e ne ghbor Dormg and I would not hM e I elated It t.o you hlld I not sup posed that you needed the leSion whlCh It conta ns It IS Impossible fo me to give yo I an adequate no tIon of the sufferIllg that I h;lVe un dergone on account of my brutal

-PI cae! ed hill farewell sel mon to an Immense congregatIOn The des e to obta n places 1lI the church mduc ed the Issumg of tlCkets but the ero vd broke through all rest a 11t and entered the chmch pell mdl fill ng ermy slttmg and standmg plaee

So great was the heat and so close the atmosphet e that se' eIal ladles fsmted and many men were over ~OJ:ll1.D- ---CD&..-- --Ar» ~ '"-"" cludmg paragraphs of the diSCO lIse

llloan by ~lIch care eX(JIl;l.Dlc:a John :Dor ng to

)0 ng lad of that he add

Iashness to ny boy ~ut fottunate ly It bas been oven Iled to my ow n good and to tbat of my fnmlly also rhe remed\ tho Igh tel' ble was comllete and no othe ch Id of m 1e has e\ er bee I p mihed by me except \ hen I ~ as m the full posseSSIOn and

Every step fOl ward IS mto the uwown God may not accept me it IS m my heart to speak for IIffil on that Western sbore but he may not let me speak Tbe Atlantic wa1>'es are to be crossed I may never cross them The PaCific 01e'18 hft them selves between theIr white mte dICt may bar me out Instead of that dIstant Golden Gate my feet may pass III at the Gate of Pea 1 Dan ger dlsappomtment SICkness death -these may be the only heutage to "II h eh I seem to be In such haste to be gone Say not In such l~sue He would I a\e done better to have stay ed rhat would not tl us be made certam The Wllhng mmd the offer of the healt IS what Goi accepts the results that he beyond make no plOper part of hIS estimate or ou S

a heavy blow on and tl at and

lCI eatmg the blol'/:s as he spol e the last of "h ch knocked the boy 0 er a plOI tl\.at waS' standing by h S Side Get Ip now~ an I go mto tl e house conlmllcd the father

a d see If you can t keep 0 t of mischIef for a ylt Ie an 1 RtOP that crymg or 111 gn e yOi\ someth ng to cry fOl

The boy ala ted fo the house st ugghng to S Ipp es, h s sops as he '\\ e It

Ie IS aston shmg sa d Donng add essmg a neIghbor name'li Han fOld wi 0 ~as near m a barn and of course 1 ad seen and I ea d all that had passed how troublesome boys are Just see those oat! now that I ve got to pICk up for that boy s ca elessne 8 and he po nted to a mCaS ue of oats, hlCh \Villham had aCCIdentally oHrtu ned.

:And It was for that tnfle that yo I assaulted your child und knock ed hIm down ~ rephe I MI Hanfo d m a souo .. ful tone

Do mg looked from the oats n OUIprISe and lepeated

Assaulted my child ana knOCKed I m down Wh)1 what do yon mean neIghbor Hanford ~

Just what I say DId you not knock the child over the plow ~

He kmd OOLll1f'''L~U and fell over It

Ir(lpliled Donng Do you go agl'llnlst parental authonty ~ Haven t I a nght to pUUlsh my own chIldren'

Certamly you have ] esponded ~Ir Hanford III a proper manner alid III a proper sp nt but not other WIse Do you think that a fathel has a right to revenge hffilself npon his child 9

mg abo t revenge 1 Of lOUIse not but who stalk

WeI fnend Donng let me you ano her questIOn for what pnr pose should a chIld be pumshed ~

Why to make It better and to do It good of COUl se qUIckly an !wered Dormg

For any other ~ qtletly asked Hanford

Well no not that I can thmk ot. Just now ephed Donng thoughtfi lIy

And now my frleno kmdly continued 11r Hanford do you

exe CIsa of my best fae lIt es and when my sense of duty has been chastened and softened by reason nd affect on

I devoted m) se1f to poor Char ley flom the tIme he lett liS bed and we en ne to mderstand one anothe as I thllk but few fathms and sons e.e do The pOOl boy nOHr blam e 1 me for bhghtn g so much happl ness fOI hIm and I have somet mes tned to thmk that h s hfe has been made happlel on the whole than It would ha\ e been had I not been tanght my luty tl olgh hIS sacrifice St~ll nmghbot Dor ng I should be soh y to have you and yo r son W II 1 am pass through a SImilar 0 deal

I tr lIst that we "hall not em phat cally and gravely responded Donng I thank ) ou for your story fr end Hanford and I shall t y and profit hy It

And he dId profit by It and we hope that every pal ent who IS eapa ble of stnkmg hIS ch Id m anger or I',,,,til,,uce, that reads thIS sketch from

will profit by It

THE SHELL ON THE SHORE We take from an English maga

zme thiS beautIfully told and mstruc tlve mCldent

I had turned over the pebbles and the damp weeds and sought WIth naked feet amongst the waves for some bnght shell or colored stone to cauy home but I could find none TIred out I sat down on llf pile of stones to 1 est an 1 to watch the wa\es un oil themselves on the walt mg sands I heeded not the tIde but let It IlO and come \tlthout no nce

suppose your treatment to your son a few moments ago did him any good or has lllcIeased lus respect

affectIOn for you ~ The boy I

After a longer mten al than I dare tell eonsldermg I was WIthout boots OIl stockmgs and my coat damp With tile splay of the last tide II woke up from my dreammg and re newed searcl! for Jl, pr ze and Bure enough there yras a shell glIstenmg and gleammg colored like sunht crystal gust dropped from the white finiers of some danng wave I did not hurry to possess myself of It, but sat still admmng It was mme I was SUrB I could reach It at any mo ment"l'l'Ith my stick and who was near on thIs lonely beach to pICk It up er e I could get It 9 Splasb splash and up rolled a huge wave hlssmg and hurrymg rat~lmg the stones " ettmg my feet--,.and the shell where IS It' I 100~E1d aronnd

venture to say IS utterly unconSCIOUS of havmg done any wrong and yet

snddenly assanlted hIm WIth an and vIOlencfl, and gave hIm a

beatinll': w}nch no pemtenyary con

I followed the recedmg w~ter dnp pmg sea grass and creamy clot~ of froth only remsmed to m~et me tbe shell the beautiful shell was gone Old Neptune had altered his mmd

got back hiS pearl A httle loss thIS but uttenng a

of the vnlne of obedIence And so we take lea, e of one nn

OthOl It does not seem real to me yet Is thIS my last Sabbath WIth ) ou 1 Am I preachmg my last se mon here 'When another Sabbath dawns '" III ItS nsmg sun come up for me {Jut of the sea? And arfl none of my Sabbaths any more to lead me h ther 1 Y ct It would be a short meetmg God may pc m t us some meetmgs by the way He \\ II soon b lUg us together nm er to part I leave With yo 1 tl e labOlS of seven teen years still If God will to bem some fruit among you I leave my man fold Imperfectfrons and f mIt es to your chanty that they may fo give nnd be forglvbn and fOlgotten I lellve for an occasIOnal glance one lIttle gave III the shades of annnrn_

whet e my first born sleeps I leave too my memory to bfJ chenshed and guarded If you WIll accept the trust I leave my love. my thanks my prayers My feet may go and hear my body forth but.lleave my heart behInd

Let us pay

DEBTS DUE TO GOD A merchant m answer to IlIqUi

nes refers back to a perIOd when he says In consecratmg my life anew to God a val e of the ensnar m" mfluences of riches and the ne

b of

Vlct can he subjected to ~thont hay mg tjte outrage mqUired mto by a legtslatlve commIttee But let me tell YOIl ahttle storr You know my

Charles!

lofty lesson never to lose an oppor tumty of taklDg every gtft of nlercy or 1lIIeiUlbeS8 the tide of tUDe may

TERMS- $2 60 a. Yea.r ill advanoe.

;A leadmg object man should be to sec r e pel mane It hornell a~d for stability It should qonslst

h~lppi.lle:ssl more the better 11 paId for land and up to a c~rt:un I

house sholild be as omfO! table attractIve as one ha the lllak ng It should e one the can gr 0 1>' to and" III chng arclUndl more and more fir ly With passmg year The wner should

and purpose to of It as long as h children should gto there IS one I lace fi d and stable them am d all chang 8

Amencans are al gether mg III then hab ts e cheaply and pull them do 1 egl et 01 we sell 0 It away half a dozen tlihes lll·:al.lletlm~!1 and III the valll hopei of bettenng conditIOn How fuch better choose early m hfe then plans WIth refer ence to a~.LU1:ug Even though our gams lue promised elsewhhe a shonld seldom be gl~en for ali un'cer-q tamty A bird III the hanells two III the bush

Ottly those who Ha\ e """I}C1J,.I'''''''4 It know how firmly a fam Iy fu,,,,,t.,,iI attached to theu long loved home stead No chllili'cn love home so well as those who have known o~ly

As the yo mg become of mar p-Illge,anlle age they should go out flom the old homestead feelmg that It IS to be the model after whlCh thmr

should be e.tabl18hcd and know tha .. tch. mil r~m:un unchanged

as the parents live a place to they can return and where they WIll be welcome A pleasmg

gU.lleless,~ "I ter confirms our doctrme thus 'The" "' g~" gam lU u8mg

settled down It 1B twofold Each year accumulates the matenal by ,hlch labor IS lelisened The rough

channels ?f labor become worn and smooth A change lllV olves a great loss and rarely IS tlime a correspond

"CI:<"":J lllg gam TIme IS lost labor BUS pended money paid out, the wear wrIter, hav~ felt as we!! fef;}_ and tear of r emo\ al lIS no small Item lives were as aetive as 0\11' 0 ......

and abo~ e all the breakmg up of old passe<f like a vapor, ... _ •. ~..;.~: ': l'a:sSQ.ci:LtieJUs IS often disastloqs m the wore the safile extreme Plnents and ch ldren be when her CI-~~:~i:'~~~rpBlnd:t!d

agam money wOllld

h,S frIends and rest and shelter

in'st~ad of s long and palDfuf'\lr:i.ndel~ini~, WIth the neceSSIty

But hiS con

come unsettled 1lI, theu habits If not be The world m theIr morals Let the man who attractIODS for our O~~priDg:, y," ....... u. has a homestead kreI It let hIm had that has none get one and labor to render It a treasured remembrance the absent and a constlmtJoyito - -'--'----vho abide m It 'Io all of

every mtelhgent thoughtful pelrso:ri, must gn e a hem tJ :lp}>ro~ al

The wealthy plenty of cattle yomg g rls An fello v who vas ant had to lead had two of the

Page 2: 0; fVol+22+(1866)/Sabbath+Recorder_1866_22_9.pdflowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When

THE SABBATH RECORDER~ MARCH 1,

The .AtcIIietll~nt E to gn e I thmk Kltt and

IS the subject {)f ~1}e famlhes who left With him last week had no such feal, as I have

cotnmlunica1!jiOlls III our paper of none for them They wele noble by Eld Geo R speCimens of manhood )lnd woman other by Eld S S hood I

do not propose to Last) ear the people on the falm of them bemO' weI e allowed a httle pIece ofland on

, .. which to I alse sometlimg for them-allow OUI readers to ThEt ovm seel had the land

thlem~~l~es </f then respec and they pUld a small lent m arrreement or woman tola me she had

SCllipt"'ru·e. There acre of land for h~1 self and SIS Most of them s~y then corn gone befole Chnstmas The

.'''''m.o;;n~ who was hel~ when I came, COlD fOl illXty cents per

MJ1~SftCl. and charged them two and a pel pound If 01 meal I

one woman, a few days ago, PUlUl""1 corn because'l she sard, It

Rev Wm DeLoss Love, No 78 Madison Stl eet, ChICago, III

Govel nment will fm msh free trans portatlOn from Cmcillnatl and Chi­cago

Illi'ORrANT TO TllOSE WHO SEJ;D RELIEF TO THE I REEDllEJ; THROUGH TilE AMERIOU! MlSSIOJ;ARY ASSOCIATION We tly to do thlee thmgs as yom

representatIVes 1 Send your gifts WIthout delay or

loss to those for whom you give them-the suffermg colored POOl, and those who labol among thllm

2 Plesent them m your name 3 Inform you whom your glfls

hm e reheved and gladdened In 01 der to thiS, two thIngs are

necessary

III the line of SWitches and ~ldeliiIgs, had passed from a for almost any amonnt of bUSIness I the maInten-propose to pnt up bnildinO's With ance of Bureau wonld

.. be u.nne(les',ary, u.nl1ns,e. unconstltu-steam power, when the number pf tlOnal Oon-apphcants Will warrant the undertak- gress' deSIre that mg of suffiCient dimenSIOns, to rent that The! e 18, then, out to such mechamcs and manllfac thiS OPllllOn betweeu the

P~Elsid.ent looks to the ad miSSion of mto the U nldn accordmg to orgamzatlOn, and

DeRuyter! on the 9th of March next, at 2 P M.

Voted, that Bro Wm 1\1 Jones pI each the !Uti oductory discourse to that meetIng, and that Bro T Fisher be alternate

On motion of Wm M Jones, I~ was v~ted, that the dhurches oom posmg thIS Quarterly Meetmg be re quested to make as full a representa­tIOn of themselves as pOSSible at each Quarterly Meetmg, and dlately after the mtroductory SClm(lOj . a free conference be held, 10 which the relIgIOUS state of each (,"hurch shall be presented, for the mutual ed­IficatIOn of the IIleetmg

fm ther than to exchange It Ther e IS actual suffe mg

fOI food Tbe ratIOns furmshed are msuffiCIent, and beslde<, me flequent ly two 01 tInee days bchmd time m le3.chmg hele flOm Norfolk An old man, badly cIlpplecl With a hip dis ease, and hiS boy, three yeaHl old,

1 WrIte YOIII post office address m evel y book and attach it firmly to e, C1 y gal ment yon make\ addmg a wor d of greetmg alld cheer

tUleIS of our ordel, us may wish to avml themselves of the advantages such an opportumty may affmd I will naIDe some branches of busm~ss that might be carned on here Just as well as anywhere carpenters, (and, by the II ay, there IS a gl eat opemng here for good carpenter s ,) wheel­nghts, boots and shoes by ma chmery, sash, bhnds and doors, t umng lathe machmery, uon found ry, &c New Mmket IS on the New Jel'\;ey Central Ralhoad, one hour and a half flOm New York City, four passenger trams each way daily, (ex; cept Sunday) beSIdes several expl ess tl aIDS It IS the great thoroughfar e from the coal and Iron mIDes of Penn­sylvama Coal can be bought for about one half II hat It costs III the Eastern States, and verylllUch can be SlivC!l on the fleIght of lIon Now, I cannot see why busmess may not be done m New Market to advantage, beSIdes the <atlsfactlOn of enJoymg OUI own SOCIety nnd church pnvlleges !\.t any I ate, I am wlllmg to mvest <orne capl}:al m tins dlI ectlOn, as stat­ed above Any Sabbath keepers (and none others need apply) who may WIsh to avml themselves of thiS op portuDlty, Will find me genClallyat home aud glad to see them, my latch stllng always hangs out, or, addl ess me by letter Should there be any who may deSire an oppoltun Ity to el ect bm!\ngS of tben own, on the unalterable conditIOn that they must be Sabha kieepmg concerns, I shall be hapllYJo confer With diem on that subject I D TITS" Olrrl!

that then transItIon state has nearly passed Congress IS unwrIling that they shill come Ill, and seeks to post­pone, thmkmg that the tranSitIOn pellodls to be protracted, therefore Congr ess thought It was wise to have the new bill eontammg the Freed men s bureap. bill mdefimte, as the PreSident says, at least until Gon gre~s shall repeal It The PreSIdent thmks It IS unneoessary Now, if you Will lefer to the old bill creatmg the FI eedmen !l Burean, you wIll find It IS IlDllted I?y the law§ of enactment to the war ohhe RehellIOn and one year thereaftel Is the wal ended ~ PractIcally It IS Hostilities have ceased Is peace restored ? No , practICally the States are still dlsturh ed, and there IS a necessity for mllI tary force The peace has not abso lutely com" Commg, but not come, the PI}lSldent says The proclama tlOIl of 1861 announced ClYII war A proclamatIOn of the Pre.ldentc Will announce that the war IS at an end Now, if I .1lm rIght m thiS, then peace ID a lchal sense will come to be In the UMted 'States Just at the da~b when the PreSident Issues a pro lamatlOnj or Congtess passes a law, declann~ that peace has come, and not before If the proelamatlOn sho1lid be mfe to-da!, then by the terms of th act cleatmg a Freed men s Burea:, we Will have one wh$e year fhereaftel At the end of at time, he PreSident says we sha have th benellt of experience If 'fe need the contlDuatlOn of the Freedmen s rUleau, Congress WIll then be m se SIOn to enact a bill

Voted, that we take up a collectIOn I'~lle .l::e'(!1"m thIS evemng for our AssoclatlOnal kD,o'l'lrn

fOl a week, seven pounds of fish, fom pounds of meal and

seventeen har d crackeFs I had the to express III figUI es fOl the meal and fish flOm the

may be called lo'.·erseer. The old man smd he went on the subject hunglY a good many days himself on the Atone He IS not one of the pomplamlllg

some of the ables~ kmd we found out hiS distress by ~n~l:~~:i~~:; He seemed a devoted C sard he "held on to that ~taff,'.1 po~nting upward I' He should

be at I est 'Ve fonnd means to neceSSities fOI a tIme MI ASSistant Stipel Intendent

N eglO Affan s, was hel e a short smce He USSIll ed us that those

to provlae for I themselves to be taken cale of We have

donbt such IS the !intentIOn, bllt ''''B''·~IS VIrgmm mudDlndled tape to

CODlte[tO With The people say that

2 Under the lId of evelY box yon pack, put a hst of m tICles, and an em elop addlCssed back to the So Clety or pal tICS sendmg If you send pICkles, apple bntter, or gmted horse radIsh, among the family pro \ !Slons, put yom envelopes mto ed bottles and expect to find agam, through your 120st office, many days ! . '

MORE OHARITY

MISSIOn Voted, that the m!Uutes of thiS

meeting be forwarded totheSA.BBATU RECORDER for pubhcatIOn;

The coIlectlO1I. on FIrst day mg amounted to $12 96

STEPru:N BeRDICK, J[Orkl atm H C HUBBARD Soordary pro tem

EDUCATING THE FRF.ED~IEN - A paper pubhshed at Macon, GeorgIa, has the follOWIng notice of the made m that city to educate the Freedmen

ofEld A B ~SldelJce m WesterJlv. OI~!W~M!le!'day' eveumg of last $170

folks died here last wmter and exposm6 Most of they are seeIllg hardel

they e, el did befor e but flashl back denlll befO! e

I am glad to notIce the flank state ments of' An Obsen er, m the RE COlmER of Feb 15th, not that I had m the least doubted the good mten tlOns of the wIlter of the artICle on Chanty, but because, lD 'the artICle, a pomt was wached "hICh the fir't one did not so clearly mam fest We may, pOSSIbly, be too sen sltlve on the Sabbath questIOn, or

too exclUSive ID our notIOns of the lIght and Wlong of Sabbath keepIng and Sabbath bleakIDg, but I appre hend the greater danger hes 10 not gnaHling well the approaches to Sabbath recreanc) KnowlDg \\ ell that the plea of CharIty has often been used to CO\ er the mconslstent practICe of many who acknowledge t~e oolIgatIOn of the Sabbath Law bnt fi6d It mOle C01!cment to dlsle

"More than 4,000 colored people, of both sexes and all ages, al e enJoy­mg the prIvIlege of IllstructIOn m the schools III Macon, establIshed, smce the advent of peace, by the charitable people of the North, and nnder the supervlBlon of the Rey Mr HEddy and Mr Rockwell, aSSisted by ten or twelve ladles flom the Northern States These ladles are the teachers, and they are saId to eVlOce energy, A DONATION zeal and talent m the management of the schools Hopkmton CIty,

jmong th resolutIOns adopted by the meetmgl at Cooper InstItute wele t40 three followmg, ~hich are wOdhy of consldelatlOn

"There are four mOll11ng schools, Sabbath, Feb one m each ot the fonr ·~~~~~I some $250 for theJm!ll~fii,r,f;£id.&, W,"""""" ca~ ntten If? "hen ask

II ouldj go back to the old churches, there IS one a: S Griswold school, embracmg the !Dore a<1~a:lIc(ld pupils of the tuormng sclwoj~

l\J;W M'RKET I J I Feb loth 18rG _. I

there IS one 1l1ght school, where Itrleecl~ men of e\ er y color, size and both sexes meet to learn

well let alone Jy the white Thel e IS one 'l'hlte famlly

half a mile II om us ne~ el been rieal us, nOl

pOl*e;l"n~,d themselves ab6ut IUS that A VETO B~ THE PRESIDE~T

g~ld Its clanns, and feallng one re On MondaY~lFebIt1alY 19th, Pleq

ReJohed, That we desn e to see the restowtlOn o~ practIcal and constltu tlOnal relatlOrls bet\\ een all the States and the Federal GO\ Clnment at the em hest practicable period nnd to that eud we fa, or the admiSSIOn mto Congress Qf all loyallepresentatlves fIOm the St~es lately m rebelho~ \\ ho "ere fairly elected and can take the oath pi eeGubed by Congl e<s as a test of un"wervmg 10J alty thr ough all the pressure and penl 'Of the 1 e hellIon

mOlmng schools about 600 a~"~lltL; J

I hellI oy tlie COlO1 who go out to find work

white f:l11llhes Inot lal off, not1nng mo~ e of them

contempt IS IUthel -nggra when I hear lof wmdo" s

school house8 fil ed as at I am thankful to be let

mark at least, of "An Obsen CI f and as many as 350 SOlnetllIIeS ~tl:eIl<1, 1 the mght school, whICh

I James Barley m ;'P'Y"-T'rl mont of Jia m:ll V rhe m*lCaseaJ 1\I numbms

m a general m""J'rm of nam S enro led fOI that ble SOCieties and ""n.tJ~rPiI two Ijum11 edl and nInety t:labbath keepCls mont~ It Win be smallCi sublect had mOHIjg away the oldel

oJ oVlug L'V h LL- _11 ...

ever: SInce the of the )lls "Cl'"U'll IS se~tmg 111 and many SI6nhry SOCiety m September last, of the dllsewblty shod chil but no clefimte actIOn could be taken, <11 en, must stay at home

11:0~~·~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~!~t~:~H::l~~~;: nf-"->.=..!f ... nL Last Fllday we had a carpenter at f Eld B il en",,,-,.,' .• , WOIK all day In the school 100m

o a ey to for maklOg 'Il"l1;mg desks The seholar:s the church at'ValIVOlth, WIS '[hat paid no attentIOn to hIm, pel haps engagement haHng been disposed of took a httle mOle hbelty to make to mntual satisfacFon, the Bom d ap nOise themselves IIIr Benus teach pomted Bro BaIlby to labOl on the es wutmg m the mght school for

lVant of tIme m the day field named, hiS ~abO!s to begm at The .t\mellcan llIlsslOnarv Asso an early day 'I]he appomtment IS ClRtlOn fOI" md mllcles sent to thell for a genmal 'H~steln miSSIOn, ein looms for teachers Ol freedmen I braemg churches, settlements, and am told they get most of theu tral's scatteren brethlen, and" hatever IS pOltatIOn from New lJOIk to Nor

folk flee I have re,()ened a hox needful to bUlld up the cause of the flom home sent filst to theIr 10011lS Sabbath Itlwas a month connng,an unneces

Another Item of busmess was pre sented m a letter flOm the Secretary of the N ortb, Western ASSOCIatIOn Last year th;e Executive Board of

Assocmtlbn, 'pth the :nd of $lOO

the MI-slonal-Y SOCiety, sent F Rogers I to labor as a mls ID Sibley crnnty, Mmnesota

I questIOn foJ! the MlsslOnal-Y tD conslde~ was, whethel to

cOlltiilUe the applOpnatlOn to the Ex eCllti'i'e Board of the ASSOCIatIOn, or to appropnate dire~tly to the church In SI~ley county, Just as appropIla tlons lare made to ~he <)ther churches m Mmnesota ~~ [atter plan was agfeed ~pon I

Letl;m s were reall flOm Miss E C Hydorn, who has ~een for some time labOrIng among tbe Freedmen at Norfolk, Vlrgmm I, The Board voted to request the paSt(;llS of our chnrch­es to do what they lean to collect and forward to lllilisifl'dorn supplies for the Freedmen, ml accordance WIth the sugges,tIOns of her letter, fi om whioh we copy as follows

'" TAYLOR FA!!" Norfolk Va 1 - February 8th 1866 I 5

I have now been Ihere so long that It probably seems as if I ought to be able to give a good account of mat­ters hfr~ But ne'Ys on the Farm IS about as uncertaIn as \~ar news used

sanly long tIme, I thought I do not kuow where the delay" as Parcels

sent dll ectly to the fm m should be dn ected to Taylor Fal m, cal e of H C p~!<ly, Norfolk Vi!' I cut an m tICle from the Ammcan JI,;swnar;y, patt of whICh, I should thmk might pi opedy be put 1n the REcOl DER

We ha,e stmted a sewmg Circle, s~ll sOOn find ourseh es o\1t of

m,lt",.;,,] to II olk upon MOle than else w luch :JJ dar e ask for want sometlinng to s~w

for patch WOl k Iwill pay }Veil And if we had sevm~l

of calIco large enough for an and of cotton large enoughl

nl·'.~~'. sJurt, there are httle fin here that would be swift to learn

shape them Will not some fnend has the "facnlty , of " huymg

remnants cheap help us m thiS thlllg~ We have reCeIved a qu~ntl ty of needles, thlead and thimbles, fori which we are very thankful, and m~lte a contilluance of snch favors

I E C HmORN The followlOg IS the snbstance of

the !Il tICle referred tQ fram the Amel Ican M,8slOllary 'V,ANTED NOW, AND THIlQUGH THE 1:E \R,

FOR TilE FREEDMEJ; 1 IMoney, for heavy bills dally IDa

tuung m our schools and miSSion.

might ha\e an mfluence m the same dent Johnson slnt In to the Se ate n message vetom the bIll to enlal ge

dlle<:tlOn, I was mduced to ral,e nn I the powers of he Freedmen s Bu

mqmry as to the lOgICal consequences reau He says It IS "Ith mnch Ie of that posItion That the pomt may gl et that he I compelled to I differ be made mOle clear, I Will take the WIth Cong:tess 10 wlthholdmg hiS hbel ty to quote a passage or two sIgnature fIom he bill but that aftel from the artICle under consideratIOn crn eful COIlS Ide atlOn he IS satl~fied

Wby should I call m questIOn that It contams pro\ ISlOns whICh ale my brother S goodness \, ho dlffe! S WIth mp 111 Iegard to the Sabbath) both unconstItl tlOnal and meonSlst I ha\ e my 'Iews ou thiS subject ent With the pu rIC welfme He re &c Iterates the exp eSSIOn of hiS strong

But what nght have L to doubt dA~lfe. te secu e the emanclp3ted 1. 'C VI \ -- ~ - ~ -h ...... h h

make who dlffm frOID meO """·"~·H)la,ob:s t eIr ile 0.0' und Eotecholl 1\ ow·, If thiS pOSitIOn IS good With of then rights, Ibut beheves tliat the

I efeIence to the fom th comml\nd Bureau as It eX1"ts IS, for the pI esent ment, It W ill apply With eqnal least, sufficl!lnt for the purposes to the first second, thud, and so on which Its e.tabhsllment "as deSigned Sneh a rule carned ont, would pro to accomplIsh :' rle objects to the dllce lhsoldet and finally clestIoy vast arbltImy !lnd despotIC power chmch ItstIf If a man s gooduess "hlch the new mensme gives to an COJ]SlstS 10 hI>; obedIence to God s Immense number of officers and law, and the hmmony of hiS own spllIt With the Gospel of Chnst then It follows that mel y act of dlsobedl ence must detract flOm h,s goodness In pIopbltlOn to hiS dIsobedience, he IS ,a disorderly person To the ex tent that a pelson IS disorc1eIly, we are to 'questIOn hiS goodness On what OthOl ground can we Withdraw flOm those who walk disorderly I ,

Now we command you, brethren, m the name of om Lord J esns Chllst

agent. ItS plOHSIOns allo" 109 the cn II law to be completely over\l(lden by the mIlltarJ, the enOl mous ex pendlture whICh It w,ll1Ovolve, and depreclltes the natural10ference from Its adoptIon, that tqe country IS stIll 10 a state of wm , and thence plO ceeds to leBew the conditIOn of the Sonthern States and hiS reconstIllC­tlOn pohcy

The Veto Message of tho Pr eSI­dent appear. to IHn e taken by sur

Resolved, ITliat we applo"e the ger: elal plIncilples announced by the PI e-Ident ID \jIS Annual ::\Iessage and m hiS late lIessage explammg the reasons fOI II Ithholdmg hiS assent to the bill for th\! contmuance and en largement of the Fleedmen s Burean, o.nd 'W'h11G lYt:i C:1.pl t':s:s thIs appl 0\ al we gn e hun our confidence, and promise him pur contmued support m all proper measUl es for the restora tlon of Constltuhftnal go\' crnmcnt In all pat ts of thb countI y

Pe,ohed Thht notWIthstanding the failure of the bill lately passed tln ough the til 0 Housts of CongI ess for the protectIOn of Ithe fl eedmen, we WIsh It undel stood that we claIm for therh the full posses~lOn and enjoyment of all CIVil r,ghtj equally With any othel mh:ibltants 0~1 the countlY, by whICh we mean all fights of pel son and prop'crty mcludmg those WIthout w hleh the oihe18 are useless-the right to sue and to testify, and com plete equahtYi before the law-and we thmk that Congress and the PreSident are bound to use all the meahs whICh the ConstitutIOn has given them to secure that end

I QUARTERLY.MEETING

that ye Withdraw YOUlseh es from e~C1y brothel that walketh dlsOlder ly, and not ufter the traditIOn whICh ya Iecelved of us And if any man obey not our word, by thl~ epistle, note that man, and have no company " Ith him, that he may be ashamed Yet connt him not an enemy, bnt ad momsh him as a brother 2 Thess

plIse, not only the majorIty III Con The Qumterly Meet10g of the gress by whom the bill was passed, Scott, DeRnyfur, Otselic, and other but a good many of the people at Se, enth day ~aptlst I Chmches con large The subject came up m the veued With the Seventh day Baptist Senate on Tuesday, when the qnes- Church of Scott, "December 29th, tlOn was rrused and voted npon- 186;;', at 2 0 clock P M

~

3 6, 11, 15 These reflectIOns were occasIOned

more especlUlly by that portIOn of " An Observer s' artICle above quot­ed But there IS no fmther ground for controversy m regard to the spmt of the article, as explamed m the RECORDEIl of Feb 15th L E L

" Shall thie bill pass, notWithstanding Owmg to tlie mclement weather, the PreSident s obJectIOns ~, The and the extr emely bad travehng, vote stood 30 for and 18 ag:nnst ItS none arnved from abroad before the pllssage over the PreSident s veto Of commencement of the serVices, and course, as the affirmative did not m for that reason Eld Wm M Jones clude two thnds of the Senators pre preached the mtroductory sermon, sent the bill was lost. • from Rev 22 8-" And I John saw

In many pmts of ilie countIy, thelic thmgs and heard them the PreSident s veto was recClved Sarvlces were held III the evenIDg, With demonstratIOns of satlsfac at which time, ~ld Stephen Burdick tlOn, snch as the finng of guns, havmg aITlved1 preached from Psalms lind the holding of public meetmgs to 37 5, 6-" Cdmmlt thy way unto

BUSINESS FOR SABBATH.KEEPERS express approval The most Impos the Lord, trus\; also m him, and he o LI e E' lor of tho abhaU R.,ord.,. mg demonstratIOn was that made m shall brlllg It t~ pass And he shall

I have been IJI'med, m years past, New YOlk, on the evenmg of Thllls brmg forth thY] nghteonsness as the to learn that many of our young men Feb 22d, when an Immense hght, and thy ~udgment as the noon have gn en as a pretext for meetlOg was held at the day" I

be Things we heat fone ..Jay are contradictedj the next, /)Jit the tale oi want and ~uffermg IS a steady fact, varymg only as ration day Iii Jnst past CIt othel Wise, and thq weathel warmer or calder IWe are told now, that .the farm has been restored to the p:fr>doned rebel Taylor, 1 the gov­ernment retammg I possessIOn thiS year. as a milItary IfE!cesBltf, to PIO Vide an asylum for lihe poor, and

2 I Clothing, of all kmds-qnantlty mor!jlmpoltant than qualIty, provld ed the holes are all stop-ped With substantIal patches, fi, e pairs of old shoet-not too old-keep out mOle nost than two pallS of new Snch conti butIOns will save :the Assocta tIOn large expenclitlll: es:lior new ma tena] I

3 StallOne,y a1ld bool...,~slates, pens, pencils, eopy books and paljll3l', are al ways III demand Also, gQod books for family readmg-not tile book on the shelf, hlih and dry, but the one which has made the ronnd of the family-the one the children say they can t spare, that IS the one for them to send, as a help and enconragement m thE! cabm, when father anti mother and chrIdlen are Just now preparmg to enJoy the luxury ot! books, and Itave no way to procure them

the Sabbath, that they cannot find COl>per Institute, preSided over by O~ Sabbat~ mornmg, a prayer employment among our people Hon B 1<' CuttlOg, assisted by a meet~ng was held, at half l1ast 10, and Douetless many of them thlOk It a long lIst 01 VICe PreSidents, melnd prea¢hmg by Eld Stephen Burdick gooq and suffiCient excuse, and one 109 some of the leadmg men of the at 11 AM, flom Heb 4, 1-" Let that the great Judge, m the day of City, and acldlessed by Hon B r us therefore ~ear, lestj a promise final acconnts, WIll accept for their CuttlOg, Hon W H Seward, Gov bemg left us o~ entelmg mto his I est, dlsobeymg God, and makmg ship Demson of OhIO, and Hon H J any of you shoUld come short of It Wieck offalth I have spent many a Raymond The followmg extlact Mjlr WhICh the Sacrament of tlie sleepless hOllr m conBldermg thiS from tlie 610smg part of !lIr Seward 8 Lord s Supper k-as adnllDlstered

mg a rent of two thousand dolilars. ThiS may or may Inot be the trnth, but It IS told U8 as such A farm near here, belollgmg to Henry A Wise, IS retarned for a sIDIIlar purposes Out of tliIrty farms COIl fiscated ID Norfolk alid Pnncess Ann counties, only these two ale retaIDed at all The others are III possessIOn of theIr owners

The to send off the farm all men and theIr

4 Famlly proVISIOns - 'Vhenever It can he done, our teachers are usually gathered mto miSSIOn families Any article of food muse m your home­flour, vegetables, dued irUltS, pICkles of any kmd, hams, smoked or salt

state of t~Ings r remember, when 8p~ech, WIll gn e our readers a COlTect Evenmg after the Sabbath, a short a young man, of hemg tempted by Idea of the grolmd on WhICh he prayer was followed by a sermon the offer of what was then considered stands from El.d W M Jones, flom Matt

large wages, if I wonld go to theClty "I have Icframed, thns fal, from 6 33-"But seek ye the kmgdom of New York and take charge of an speakmg of the eXCltmg subJect--a of God and hiS nghteousness, and all establIshment m my line 'of bUSIness colliSIOn between and difference of thesd thmgs shall be added unto you ' The temptatIOn was a powerful one, opmlOn between the PICsldent of the After WhICh a Iseason of conference and had It not been for the small Umted States and Congtess, about d I

the Freedmen s Bureau bill I Will I was enJoye spalk of grace 111 my soul, whICh led say upon that subJeG-t, that, duly con- On }<'Irst day! mornmg, Eld Bur-me to conclude that to obey was bet- Bldered, and alone, It IS not a ~atter dICk preached from Romans 14 7-ter than saCrifice, I fear I should have of snffiCient moment to eXCite the at "For none of uk In eth to himself;" gone WIth the multItude And now tentlOn whICh It has received, or the and agam m the evenmg from I '\ I k b k th h mterest whICh has been conve\:ged ,,'

can 00 ac WI t e greatest upon It Both the Congress of the Romans 14 12- So, then, evelY confidence, and say that, had I JIeld- Umted States, and the PreSident, one of ns shall give account of hlm­ed to the temptation, It would have know, that we are m a transitIOn self to God" proved my rum The Lord has taken state from war to peace-that we BuSINESS MEETING

be denolIllnated a 1I!Ixed scl~qc,l, account of the acter of the pU:\111s, fO! n·".mn,n of 70 down to I the mere flom the old married spllghtly yellow lass, ages may be seen there '

QCEEN VIOkRIA, In her speech at the openmg of 1jkitish. ParlIament, referred to !A~b.er'i¢an f:.ms m a very Allndmg to the rljsult late CIVIl wal, and one of the proIDment events

Involved In ItJthe abohtlOn of is lave ry-she said

"I have obs rved With satl' ction that the U mte States, attar erml lIatmg successf lly the severe trut gle III IIhICh ~ey WOle so lo!g en gaged, are WI ely repamng t e rt vages of Civil \ ar The aboh on of slaHIY IS an e'~nt calhng fOI II the cordial sympav~les and cong stula tlOns ofitlils c01~ntry, whleh hh al ways b~en fOlemost III showI/lg Its ahhorrence of an mstltutlOn repugnant to C\ ery feelm~ of JustICe and hliman-Ity _--='+' -,,:,,_--.,._-,-

TilE PE~nODY CilARITlES -The re cent munificent mcrease of the ro~ al gifts of Mr Peabody t{) the London poor, has eliCited wor(ls of hearty praise from the pless III that cq!,lntry , When we remembe,r, s~fs a Ln er­

pool paper, "that thl.!! great "ll\.l,~;VU'U man, thiS 1m ge hearterl and . e~:$lellel~t Christian, IS not an Englishman, but R natne born American, who happen ed to be successfnl m trade III the Bntish metropolIs, !ueh an act ap pears to be the, ery poetry of cliar Ity, which ought to find Imitators amongst the many rmllionalres of our own countrymen" Such 18 also the oplmon expressed by the London TImes, which observes, that such gene­r ous acts ought Ito elICit others of like nature

A W ASIIINGTON LETrER-(not very good authorlty)-says It has lat1Y come to hght, that the mstrnctio s under which the Fleedmen s Bure u III LoulSlaI\a was so completely ilis" rnpted In November, ItS 300 schodls bronght to a close soon afterward, the' freedmen and dIScharged colored 801-dlers arl ested as vagrants m the Stl eets of N elv Odeans, Without pro­cess of law, an.d the orphans of freed men returned to former slaveholders as apprentICes, were IIDp:hted the PreSident himself, and that Fullerton acted accollding to cut1\ e InstrnctlOfs I )

THE FREEDllEl'C S BI/REA!; -On ploD\hlgatlOn of the veto message of the PreSident, Major General 0 b Howard, CommISSIOner of the FrE)ed men s Bureau, addressed a letter of mstructlOn to the VarIOIlS assistant commISSioner s throughout the South, m which he adVises them regarding theIr now still more embarrassed d,u ties He also states that thl! PreSident has deolared tl1at the present law prOVIdes for tlie eXistence £If the bureau for at least a year more tbe present time

aged and mstead The

beji~ing to affect our ,ta~cin~t iODLtl;tlie best quality

seh(llmrs. for-

meat;-,-will be most useful These should be packed In boxes, separate from the clothmg and books, and marketl "For Teachers l' Send the money and boxes to

care of me up to this time, for whICh have many freedmen and refugees-i A busmes8 meetmg convened on I I. ldi that they are destitute and snifermg I

hope to be than ul, and will trnst -and that It l8 the duty of a Just FlIst·day mornmg, at 9 AM, Dec , him for the future people, m Its trIumph, to pro teet all 31st, and was organIZed, after prayer, GEN GnANT spent last Thursday m

The AmerIcan MiSSIOnary ASSOCIa­tion, 61 John street, New YOlk

Rev C L Woodworth, No 13 COI:nhill, Boston, MaSs.

P SIllIth, IBtLi.liIiing, 93 West 6th

I have a proposition to Illy before those who were the Victims m the at- by appomtmg Eld Stephen Burdick, New York, where he was called upon those to whom It may concetn, VIZ tamment of Its success Both Con- Moderator, andl Henry C Hubbard, durmg the day by!l good many of I have procured a suffiCIent quantity gress and the PreSIdent have agreed Secretary pro ~m the leading Citizens, and at a meet-ofland at the New Market Depot, to prOVide by law for the proteCtion V t d th t h th ti ng of the Loyal League m the even-oflefngees and freedmen dunng the 0 e, a w en IS mee ng I W1t~ an assurance from the Railroad war, and one year thereafter Both adJourns, It adJ0111'1lS to meet With mg, he was presented With a Company for ample accommodatIODS I Congress and the PreSIdent agreed, the Seventh-daf Baptist Church at I of Geo. Scott.

~~~----~--~--~~----~--~--~------~--~~--~~~~~

and the The entlIe sum $40,000

Page 3: 0; fVol+22+(1866)/Sabbath+Recorder_1866_22_9.pdflowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When

THE SABBATH RECORDER, MAROH 1~ -I Fear of tricldnm the T C A Dexter an agent of the ]~117 ~:()]~lrlABJi:E~?8-... E found. 10 pork begms to Un ted States lias mshtuted a SUIt

lU,W ADVERTISEJI(EN ra fect some of the western agamst all the members of the late The Ch cago pape s nform us that a court martial whlCh toned h m at load of pork put on sale at PeOl a II Mob Ie for alleged f aud.s layrng h18 I no s recently was exammed ml damages at $500 000

FLOWER AND VEGETABLE SEED

c oscoplcally and. two of the hogs Dr the med c ne man of were al ve w th the ck lUI! Dressed. s a livmg proof of the ~::'~p~~l:~eo hogs exanuned at DlXon were found prmter s nk He expends

Some t me s nee a very mystenous robbbry took place at the Park Batik New; York T venty thousand dol lars n bonds Wele taken from the desk! of the Cash e and no clue cou d be had of them It vas known that

Cash er of a Southem bank was :Wi.thi:n the raIl the mo mng the bond. '~~~~~;it,~~~n; That man has s nee tl up a defaulter and has ab SC(mOiea, Noone Jl0:\j; !lQubts that he knew someth ng or lihe nll8smg bonds

to be nfected $150 000 n ad.ve t s ng h s The alleged frauds and larceOles of Imiedicllies m 2 000 000 almanacs and.

the oonducto s of the Concord (N H) VIII'lOUS newspapers Railroad. cause qu te an eXCltement Jesse R Grant father of General n the Gran te State The Postmaster U S G ant has been appo nted.

at Conco d. Robe t N Corn ng who Postmaster of Covrngton Ky a po was forme ly a cond.uctor on Sald. s tlOn n a town of three or four load IS among the mpl cated. and thousand mhab tants and worth an attachment of $75 000 has been about SIX hund.red dollars per annum placed on h s property Gen Grant has d.ete mmed to sus

The people of Ch li ha e been pend. the publIcat on of all d sloyal g eatly cheered. lind. encouraged. by newspapers at the South Depa t the leports of the miversal sympathy ment commanders a eo d.e:ed. to send wh ch the publ c op n on not orily m cop es and the facts to hIm Ame lca but n Europe expresses for Butter and. lard. should not be kept them They are firm n refus ng any n the same apa 'tlUent With kerosene hum liating cond. tons of peace Illld as all fats readily absorb and. l~a n ms st on ample d.amages be ng pa d. od.ors lind the fine aroma of butter by Spa n ~ may thus be serIously mJured

A colored. man of Geo getown D Smca 1820 the fonr great' anthra C who has amassed. a large fortune Clte coal fields of PennsylvaUla, the by dealmg 10 /lour presented. a Schuylkill, Lehigh Wyommg and. ito a wh te man n "Vashmgton when: Lackawanna and. Shauwkiri have the latter kicked. h m and. a c owd. sent 134 121 469 tons to market soon gathered threatemng the black man v th lynch ug He had. to be The quant ty of lumber cut and. locked. up fo tho p eservat on of h s manufactured annually m Ma ne IS life reported at 1 10>0 000 000 of feet

Ex Secretary Chandler s account of ~~1uat on of the same aQpllt $2{) 000 h s mvest gatlon of the offic al cor "t pt on at the So Ith will startle the Mr Israel P Brayton of Somerset co ntry F auds comprehens ve Will Mass has recently killed one httel of nvol e mIl tary and. Clvil offic als Ulne p gs fifteen months old. which

The fi auds dur ng tlie yea amount to we ghed 5 3"" pounds !l.veragiilg 595 mo e than a hund.red lUlll ons of dol pounds each la'B A spec al comm ttee of mvest The length of the bndge Just com gat on w II be appo nted pleted ove the Hudson Rver at AI

A plot to release all the p soners bany IS 4 800 feet the cost was $1 confined n the New York Tombs 200000 and one year and. e ght was d scovered last week Several of months were consumed m bruldil)g It the most noted c m nals we e to per On FrIday last Feb 23d the Oh 0

fPI m the leading pa i;s n the attempt ~'h er steamer W rncheste was de and. ropes g appl ng hooks ch sels 1troyed. by fi e above Wellsville and. files and. a number of other Imple twenty lives ale saId. to ha e been ments were found upon them lost

The casket contarn ng the rema ns A woman n Troy died recently of of Pres d.ent L ncoln was opened. a a broken hea i; n conseq lence of her sho t t me s nce and. t vas found daught~r s elopement w th a marr ed that the featu es of the deceased we e man ohhat place scarcely d. sce n ble - the embalm Accounts from ?tlontana state that ment seem ng to ha e offe ed 200 men pe shed. du mg a rocent I ttle if any es stance to the en n that terr tory c oachments of co upt on A boy 10 the Engl sh County of

Speake Colfax vu/?e ed a box of Sussex has died. of hydrophobIa f: om c gurs ;v th a Connecticut Rep~ esent the neglected. b te of a at at e that the Pres dent would. s gn Nancy Jackson a colo ed. woman tI e F eedmen s Bureau B II On the 104 years old d ed. at the almshonse no n g afte the eto the Represen 10 Ha tford Conn recently tat ve foun 1 the c g rs upon h s desk endorsed. F1 om a VlCt m of m s placed confidence

A boy named Nathan Le;v s aged. 12 yea s 1 vmg n New York hIe fly ng a k te on Sat raay fell fi om the oof of 1 a father s d ell ng to the yad a d stance of about 50 feet one of h s le~il: and h slower Ja were lORen Hter 1 ngenng for some hours death ensued ~

A fellow while play ngmth aten~"''''-----=--:'::':''-=--:':.:..c..._~----p n ball 10 W 0 eester d opped. t on the head. of a com pan on knocking him almost senseless To sww his gr ef at the ace dent vh Ie bathing the head of the suffe er he robbed h m of h smIle conta n ng iGa fo "h ch he was a Tested

John S Pearson who had served threeoy.ears n the;Southweste n f my

rece ved a dange ous wound at A yonng Ge man grrl go ng to of Ch ckamauga was hang Cal forn a to JO n and be mart ed to

] day at Goshen Orange a lover from whom she had long cf)llnt"~ N Y n atonement for the been parted became so ne ~ons as

of Walter Grego"1 an old the oyage neared ts end that she fai'mlll', whom he ass ass nated on the could ne the eat nor sleep and sl e

Septembe last The gallo vs was Ian led at San F:t [Inc sco [I rllvrng l\fas e ected n the co ITt oom n man ac 'th ch the pr soner rtad been tel and sentenced to death The celeb ated pac ng horse K oJ

ney Jr d ed at New Orleans a few Mayor Booth of Brooklyn was re d H 1

cently the reClp ent of ~ neat 1 ttle ays ago e was va ued at $2" 000 and. h18 own rs once offered. to bet box brought from a distance by that amount that he could. pace h s Adams Exp tlfos wh ch t~ all qutward nile n 2 10 Kmney was a large appearances contruned s~mething of oan and. one of the mostrema kable consld.erable value The pr ce fo ho~es of the age expressage was $1" wh ell be ng pa. d the box was opened. and to the l!.. number 01 * eves who have surpr se of HIS Honor l~ sole con been CUl y ng on a systemat c scheme tent was a dned. np smoked. ham of of robbery of the Jl1r e Rulli oad Com some e ght pounds m we£ght pany hElve been detected and. arrest­

ed and bne of the most .successful The Wash ngtQn co respondent of detect ve ope at ons e~ e hea d. of

the Tr bune says that tHe eno mo S g ven to the world. amounts pa d by Government durmg the wa and now bemg aad. ted the e The Treasnry Department has Ie­arll shown by the fact that the ac ce ved. fi om the late so called. Con counts of Col. Crossman of' Phila federate States smce the close of the delphia now at the ThiId Aud. tor s war the sum of $27960000 berng offi e rnvblve disbursements to the mostly from the sale of' captured. and amount of $97 0001000 or over $2 abandoned prope ty of all kinds m 500 000 per month for clothing and. eluding cotton army supphes The celeb ation of the bITthday of

The project of a sh p canal around George Wash ngton was qruto gen the falls 1: N agara 8 assumrng d.e eral the large Clt es espec ally de tiUlte aha e A pet tlOn ~ befo e the votmg the day to a SUBpens on of Leg slatu e of N~w York to mcor bus ness and m many cases partiCl porate th~ N a~ara Sh p Canal pat on n memonal exelC sos of some The canall!s not tq be less than 1,,0 sort feet wlde pn the sqiface.1 and 90 feet Mr DeBow calculates n hlS Re wld.e on the bottom w th 13 feet m v ew that the expen!\e of plantrng depth of water ana With locks .ot 1000 acres m cotton and 250 n corn less than 46 feet wide now s $74 400 and. the mcome from

Gov Pierpont ,lfV gm a has re an ordinary crop on that amount ce ved. rnformat oJ from S r Rondell land. now s $150000 leavmg Palmer the Attorney General of gmlof net profits of $75 600 England.l that th~ English govern The wife ofJ A Gaylord a banker ment has ~n l~S possess on some $\2 of St Lo s was burned to death re 000 belong ng to the Mattey School cently by her clothes taking fhe as near Will amsburg Tliefund.s we e she ulked. by the pa lor grate She pa d m dur ng a chancery srut more was but 20 years old had been mar than a century ago and have been ned two years and had. an rnfant a overlooked feW] weeks old.

The San Franc scans have had .. MaJo Geo W Stedd.en was killed recent sensation in the shape of a at 'l\tusville Penn a fe v days- Bmce balloon ascens on by <me Auguste by a reckless stage driver ~ ho rn Burlaze a'he -reronaut was ea TIed. turn ng a co ne brouiht h18 coach out over the waters of the bay where m oollIsion With a post th OWing the his balloon suddenly collapsed and MaJOI to the ground and eausmg h s he fell mtl the wl{ter Fortunately d.eath lllstantly he was an expert sw mmer and. was A New York phys cllIn was re saved. by a boat sen~ out for hIS cently called to see a child supposed. escue to be III cOllvulslOns aud. on a TIvmg

Dur ni the past SiX months there found. ten persons m the same tene­have been 171 fires n New York ment m a .tate of prostratlon from C ty mvolvmg an alleged. loss of$3 the effects of coal ,gas proceeding 984 304 oh wh ch the msurance was fi om a bakery m the basement $a 805 846 The amount prud. by! the More than three Jiundred. dead. per underwnters was $3 148 1462 or about sons are found. III New York CIty 7/J per ce~t of the whe}e loss Dar nually whose llld.ent ty the mquest mg the aame SIX months the pro fails to establish A dead. house p<p:l!lOn of losses by fule which was IS therefo e to be erected. Slm lar to p,ald. by msurers was otil~ 39 per cent the Morgue ill Pans where the

Burglars ente ed. aJ unoccupIed bodies will be kept for recogntt on house rn l'ans and. wite caught by An applIcatlOn by a lecture asso the pohee B ttrng roun a fire made ClatlOn ill Washington for a hall ill I.C(lfl.tlmD,tloD mth the costly furOlt e drinkrng that c ty for William Lloyd Garnson the best wmes and prepal'mg for a I to lecture m was refused. the other grand blowout day unless the commIttee would

One of the lions Of the skat ng agree to keep out all negroes season at the New York Centlal Park I The tondon Times beheves that the IS a. young man who has lost both slave trade on the African coast 18

legs but skates gracef'~lly and Bwiftly praeticlilly extmct, beca1lJe It has ceaa-With a pm ot artificial ~nes I ea to be profitlbl~

GEMS OF SApRED SONG AN ELEGANT COLLIj:GTION OF SACRED

MU~IC

COHPR~8 NG

-THE PEOPLE S F1VOBITE 'PIECES ANll ru~

CBO CE T COMPOS TION~ OF TilE BEST COMPOSERS

G EORG E W BER RY & CO MANUFACTURERS .l.ND DE.&.LEB8 IN

WALNUr CRI'J"rNur A.ND PA.L.'HEIl' OHAMBER FURNITURE

REFRIGERATOR~ BUR E A US WARD R BE &0

1 AND 2 HaL E8 BLOCK Baymarket Square Boston

GREKl' ORIENTAL PANACEA.

HABHEEBH OANIJ Y

BBBB HBBB BB BB HB HB BB BII HB BII BS BH HBBHBII;IISl BB 'jBII HII HII BB BB HII HEI HII aB

A AAA

AA.!A AA AA

At.: AA AA AA AA.AllAA AA. AA II AA

AA AA AA AA AA AA

BBRH HBBB A.A.AA. A~

HAS lI'E E 8 1I OANIJ Y

SS HHBH !IS SS HII

SS SS HII SS SSSS HH

SS HII DB SS HH HH

SB BRBHBHDIl WITH SS HRI HII

PLEASING PIANOF RTE ACCOMPANI BSSS SS HII "''''''1'8 88 HO -- SS SS \ HB

273 BBOiA.DW A. Y

NEW YORK

SS S8 HB S8 \ HIlHII

THE SYLVAN OR~Nl' COMPANY

151 W ASBINGTON STREET BO!;TOltiJ

(Oppo i e the 01

EEEEIi1EEEEEE hE EE EE EEE EE EE EEl E E~:EEEEE EE E EE EE EE EEE ~El RE

EilEEEEEEEEE

Page 4: 0; fVol+22+(1866)/Sabbath+Recorder_1866_22_9.pdflowed WhICh was at last broken by For yard d I emble fpr Ihy f lure lot Mr Hanfo d slIymg Tbere s One "ho sees tl e end fro the b. When

,

J¥GI.Qa"i/l6tells the follow ng ment on the name Senator Lane of

THE SABHATH RECORDER, 1, l:86&.

tor of the Free State of Kansas VlSlt­ed h s old home InlnCliana and found h s Wife still bloom ngand handsome and su Tounded by ad'nurers With

length The apparatus consumes 600 tons of ooal In a yea There a e banana tl ees 20 feet h gh With clusters of frUIt sugar cane coffee trees bamboo and In sho t every tropwal plant that can be named' Several of the palm trees a e from 50 to 60 feet high The smoke of the Immense fhe unde neath s cat led In p pes undel ground to an outlet n the woods The coal IS blought m a tunnel 600 ya de under g ound One fountaIn throws aJet of wate to the hight of 75 feet

A BA'll.I'EBY GUN -A <t~~~~~i!~f STONINGTONi AND PROVIDENCE bas mvented a sort of j of ..lND

rrfles w th three barrels capable STONINGTO:i AND NEW LONDON RAIL

of dlscbarg ng 600 balls mmute rOADS lest he TIS ted h~r nom t me to bec~me preseutly the acc~pted

loyer and vas rema cd to her

STEWART THE MILLIONAIRE He has many partners but they a e

only po. tners 10 plOfits He s the sole master of all that IS bought and Bold He knows every artlOle that caines n and goes out of the store No bundle leaves Without a check He selected a shawl far h s Wife one day and neglected to check It It could not l<>ave the bu Idmg Np merchant n ON ew Y <i) k works so many hours Ol gives such und vided attention to hIS busmess H s looms are n h s down town sto e He comes down eo. Iy and takes hiS dmne abou~ 5 (). clock retullls and re nams at h s Walk t lliate at n O'ht He IS as d fficult to appr oach a~ the Grand Lama Go to the sto e and Y(Jll. Will

the doo by a cou teous O"!~.lIelIl'1-lI, once an affillent merchant

OWl! establ slunent To quest on if M S1Jewart s n ~ a

response comes What IS your busl ness ~ I want to see Mr Stewa t

can t see h m dnless I know bus ness It s p vate you

lY.h Stewart has no prIvate U":"LUe,s I must know what you

If your statement 18 sa1:is1acl;ory, you are aHa v.ed to pass

sta ra Here you are met by an bland but po t1y gentleman

J Idge of one of ow: cou ts­tl e confident 0.1 busmess aooent

'" compamon of lI1r Ste vart to he devotes all hiS time He

~!'.JeCl;S you to a se es of cross ques as goro s as if )'1ou we e on a at cou t He keeps you from

~tI'w".~t If he can If he call then turn comes he usn s you to a bo~ 10 by 20 wlhe e s ts the

auj;oCl"at of the New Yak me chants ,"~~~iv,po you th a blank co n

a cold eye ill s vo ce s suIlpr,esseil. h s face nan mate and

You h t y through

y~h~t~~it~~~~~S'i need a st ong ti lllUU~" to un the T: b ne

ROW TO MAKE MUTTON A lot of Coteswold sheep havmg

been seen 10 !ew York that would weigh nom 30D to 400 pounds the propneto (a jCanad an) was asked b s method 0:f1 fatten ng sheel and repl ed I I

The charges ale placed a sort hoppe like a coffee mill a tl m pa t tlOn In one ed tbe powder and m the balls the hopper conta nmg enough for seve al lounds The caps a e then placed In a httle slidmg arrange ment at the Side of the gun ThiS beIng done all that IS reqmred IS to tu n a small crank and the batte y opens ts fire With t emendous rapldi ty The oyl nde of the model ex h b ted s 6 1 2 Inches long and 9 mches n dmmeter and conta ns 84 chamber~ resembl ng the chambe of Colt s s x shooter It loads and caps tself and wOllis With the ease of a

revolve p sto1 The a erage of pow de requ ed IS only about ~ne th d as m ch as v. hat IS Oldma 111 used 10

o hel guns I

----'-----+

In the filst pjace I secure a good: bleed That ,S the most Impor tant po nt The ~ext th ng s to keep them gr 0 v ng :f1 0m the ttme they a e weaned till t~ey a e taken to the 1VI T DO You DO 'TITH SOAP SUDS 7 slaughte hous never alia v ng them -Of them the Seo "Fa" e says to gro v poo at any season of the although gene ally deemed only fit J ea I have ed them all the hay for be ng run off nto the {Jam non peas and oat they will eat Peas sewer m the easiest a d most expe are better than Ind an COlD for ma~ dltlOUS manner poss ble they are mg mutton Oats furmsh a n tro nevertheless h ghly bellefic al vege genous matter I fo the fo qtatlOn of table feede s as well as useful msect necessary mUfcle Peas produce pleventl es Hence theyshonldnevCI mo e fat thallj the same numbe of be wasted mo e espec ally by pa t e pounds of cereal gill hav ng ga dens as the applwat on

Do yoo feed any lOots and to the g ound whethe m w ntel or shaw 7 1 summer Will sho v benefic ally not

Yes each heep gets no less tban only on ordinary vegetable cops but one a two po nds of tUIn ps la ly also on ber y bushes sh ubs bo der v~th all the s~aw to eat and I e on Howe s and even vmdow pot plants th~t he want and II good she lIS h Ie if po red a syr nged 0\ er p 0 ded It a supplv of pu e wa oses cabbages &c they WIll pre te and salt; tick at pleasu e ent ar at least m tlgate the m s

Ho v muel). do ) 0 expect to (fet eh evons do ngs of the g een Hy and for the la gest lof J au flock '" catc p Ila s

T:vo hund e 1 dolla s pe head ~--'-------'-o I sh p them fan th s ma ket

The next day wc leru:ned the) ve e taken at that p ce fOI CI stmas mutton

i

THE OHOLERA The Pa s Acade n-y } as

the folIo v ng dond sons 81 ect ng the clole a

1 That As at c cholera IS m all well a thentlcated qases II cee led by p emon to y symptoms

2 That these symptolD5 may be emo ed v th the g cute t ease an 1 nth the certa ntv that onCe emo

cd the dangero s Ie od need not be fea ed

3 rJ at a vholesome s( engtl en ng d et and tl c con monest attent on

to the state of the ge e al health of the I ill dual ill p e ent the oc eu ence of any ~la n ng sym! to ns

4 That g 0 ancc and np dence hal t pI nl'glect of clean! ness and Ilnhealthy d vellmO'< are the only causes of fatal oases-that n short ohole a sad sease much Ie s to be dreaded than typhus fever and other op dem cs by h ch we a e often un conse ously sur 0 nded

TI c Academy recomm~nded treat ment and attent on ill the early tM'= of the disease and showed that out of 130 000 IS tat ons m England 6 000 pe sons nar o~ ly escaped real cholera vh Ie only 2;)0 actually hild the d sease In other words the S) B

tem of ~ stat ons p evented 5 ~;)O cases of cholera

ADVER'fISmG TI e reason why the gl eat Sima

pa lla man could afford to bu Id the handsomest palace on F fth Avenue -1\hy Phineas T Bn num could af ford to lose t" 0 fortunes and be 9t 11 wealthy- vhy Pmfessor Hollo

ay had abnost tl e large!lt mnhe It­ed estate n England- vhy th ec 1m mense fort nes ha e been made by th ee se eIaI Se \ ng l\I:1.ch ne Com pan es why a poo fifth rate d uggtst wi 0 ten yems ago kept a I tLle ob scu e sto e m Ph ladelph a s to day mak ng a t of commou rum aud a few he bs a p mcely neome-and why hundreds of othels a e succeed ng m th s va Id ~ h Ie the ne gh

bors m the same 1 ne of busmess are fa lng-lies mo ethan anyth ng else n the one wo'rd-lld,elt SlDg Me

chants a e beg nn ng thOloughly ti unde stand th s and the va lety an ngen ty of the means whe eby th

public s made acqna nted With th va es of the wolld and the r wh~re

abouts IS a study of tself The ma Jar ty of these methods are of very late ong n .lind have sprung f am the oompet tlOn m every hne of Dusmes st m latlng trades to tlie exelClBe of every e:x!ped ent m Older to woo the custom to thell counters

COLORADO !1iNES -A w :rt~r from Oolorado after allud ng to some of the great lodes of that country thus speaks of ~ome of the lOads which have been put upon Eastern cap tal IstS

One company paid $20 000 m New York for claims vhwh at e utter!it worthless Another myested l!S70 009 n a large number of clatms O~,

two of them have any apprec able

BL"lS ETlNG HORSES IN WINTER­

TI s s often v a gly done When tl e horse beco nes 1 eated by ha d labo 0 Ion" t a\ el ng the blanket s thro n on h s back at once-the apor steams Ip f am h shot s des

becomesco ndensed and wets the blanket and as the horse Mnt nnes to coolie cold and Ht cove nO" IS of I ttlc lse A better way IS to "let the an mal stand ncovered for a fe v Dllnutes a longe or shorter penod accord ng to circumstances unt 1 cooled down to about the ordma ~ temperature but not to any degree of chIll ness then thro von a dry blanket Farmers <hould remembeE th s fact

A

LAWS OF RHODE ISLAND Passed at tI e Janna') Sess on gf the General

AE emb y

IN ACT n elat on to the 0 tstody of p sone s comm tted under the au tho ty of the Un ted States

It B enac d by the Gene al AOlembly as fo 10 S

Sec 1 It shall be the d Ity of the wa den of the State P Ison to I ece ve and safe keep tbe e n all pr sone s comm tted the eto under the autho Ity of any co t of the Un ted States held w th n th s State until such p :rsoners shall be d seHa ged by due cou se oflaw of the IT n ted Stat!'s under the 1 ke pE'nalt es and liab 1 t es as m case of I Isone s comm Lted by tlie autho ty of thiS State

Sec 2 The TIllstees of the Re fOlm Schoo m the c ty of PrOVidence shall be author zed to re e ve nto saId school childIen under the a"e of

" eighteen yeal s conv cted before any court of the Un ted States With n thiS State of c Immal offences upon hke te ms and conditions as if can v cted of c 1m nal offences before auy of the COUlts of thiS State

Sec 3 Th s act shall take effect up-on ts pa.sage

A late number of the Se e iJic Ame r can dese bes an adm able nven tlOn part culatly des gned for hosp tals and rooms n mala ous locat OIlS but which may be emplo]l'ed With ad vantage m clOwded hotels and even In p vate dwell ngs It IS an appa mtus by means of h ch the foul al of a closed room may pe pu fied di ed :wa med n W nter and cooled \n summer w th no furthel sup£! es from Without than what w n keep up the supply of oxyge 1 exhausted lD breath ng It consists of an up ght pee of furn ture I ke a common ward obe adDllttmg all from btllo v which passes through a pan w th a WIre gauze bottom covered :v th lumps of nnslaoked lime and another filled WIth broken charcoal be ng cooled at last by pass ng over flag ments of rce when It descends and returns to the room Llllle fharcoal and melt ng we ate all grea~ absorb ents of Impurl11es the lime heats 1;he au enough tel seou e run ascending curront and the Ice cools It till It falls and thus keeps uE a b Isk c eu lat on In hot weathel !the d aft IS secmed by the ce alone and 10 cold weathe 1 me by ItS heat ach eves the san e result half a. bushel hav ng pro duced a constant cun ent for ten days and n ghts The cost of pu fymg fifty cubiC feet of 81 per mm Ite 18 only two cents an hour added to wh ch IS the fact that the nfected Irme and charcoal and even the Ice watel will all be of added value as manure for thell se vICe m the cause of

lhea1th

~----~I··-------

Af,PEmOELY DOMAIN The co nt y domest ° esl;aHli~lment

only of the Duke DevEITlshi.re wodld 0FouPY U"T'.P.t counties The surrounding m cir(lUlI\fereitc:e,

value and they are of a class whIch oan be bought here for $500 to $1000 each A thlld expended ala ge sum fa a fane ed lode vhi,ch never ex st ed at all thE! seller exhibit ng very 110h a e alleged and dt course proved to .come f1 om !It bu,t really f am a dIstant m ne ~i would be easy and wholesome to 1 dge one or t '1'0 such characters lD New -York pemten t ary 'tlJ.Qugh 'Eery Eastern capital lBt who buys i<lnartz lodes Without their exammatfon by some tIust­worthy pe son I m his nterest de sel ves to be sWi1Ddled li!Ild IS morally certa n to get hIS deser 4s

AN ACT 10 amendment of Chapte 530 of the Statutes ent tied An act enabling any of the lOCO "Fornt ed banks of th s State to close up theu busmess w th the v ew of o gamz ng as nat onal banks

It s enacted by the General Assembly as follows I Sec 1 Sec 7 of the aot to whICh

th s s an amendment s hereby so amended that the bills of State ba s pIa Ided to be distrOyed unde e PIovlslOns of said ~~vElnth sectIOn of sa d Act may bJlfleiltroyed hy tJ e ohl go s or a ~Jor tylofthem 10 e bdnd p oYlded to be g ven under t e proVISIOns of thCj sa d Act and centlfied by said obligOl s 0 a maJ r Ity; of them nncler oath to the G n e al T easu er I

Seo 2 ThIS !Art shall take e:lii ct IDllDed ately I .AN Acr 1D amen\lment of Chap er

229 of the R~vi~ed Statutes f salarres and compensation of cert 1D officers

It IS enacted by t~e IGeneral Assembly as follows I I Sec 1 The ~nnual salarl[ of tpe

ChIef Justice ofl the Supreme Coq.rt shall be two thousand five llUndr~d dollars and of each of the otHer Justices of slIld Court two thonsand four hundIed dollars I

Sec 2 Sec. 7 of the act to whIch tlus 18 an amendment 18 heneby ~e perued I

A true copy attest JOHN R BARTLE'lT'1 . • Secre~ of State

OPPOS T 9 TY HA L AND PARK O~ER RA S:. RT ST.f(E.ET

NEW YO K

SPAC ODS REFECTORY BHH ROOMS A NV BARUI>Il" SHOP

SE£lV AliT" Ii TALLO fD TO IEeE VE PE QUltil S

S30 000 000 LOAli 0' Tili

REPUBlIC OF MEXICO

LIFE GROWTH AND BE ~UTil:

MRS S A AL EN B

WORLD 8 II.! I R RES:rO 11 E II

lJRE88INIJ

STR~lIGTEl~:S

LElNG ElE:Y THE: El.1.I1l

THEY ACT DIRECTLY U(,ON 1 ElE ROOTS

OF THE: H~ R SUP LYING REQUIRED

N"OURISHII NT .um N.l.TUilAL UOLOR

AND BEAUTY RETURNS G IE:Y HAIR DI:;

APPEAns B~LD SPOTd ARE: COVEtED

HAIR TOPS FALLING AND LUXUR ANT

GROWTB b THE I E~ULT LADlE:; AND

CHILDR N V LL J\PPR&CIATE TElE DE

IGHTFUL FRAG ItNCEl AND R CEl GLOS

BY APPIH lANCE: IllPARrED TO THE

H.l.IR AND NO l'E!R OF 1)0 L SG THEl

SKU< SCALI? OR 110,,[ ELEu.l.lIr HEAD

DREl:;S

So/ D BY ALL D U (JIST~ DEPOT 99 &; 200 GRo;ElI V Cil ST

Ie BOl'EL